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Magazine (firearm)

 

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Magazine (firearm)



 
 
A magazine is an ammunition
Ammunition

Ammunition, often referred to as ammo, is a generic term derived from the French language la munition which embraced all material used for war , but which in time came to refer specifically to gunpowder and artillery....
 storage and feeding device within or attached to a repeating firearm
Firearm

A firearm is a tool that projects either single or multiple projectiles at high velocity through a controlled explosion. The firing is achieved by the gases produced through rapid, confined combustion of a propellant....
. Magazines may be integral to the firearm (fixed) or removable (detachable). The magazine functions by moving the cartridges stored in the magazine into a position where they may be loaded into the chamber by the action
Firearm action

In firearms terminology, an action is the physical mechanism that manipulates cartridges and/or seals the breech. The term is also used to describe the method in which cartridges are loaded, locked, and extracted from the mechanism....
 of the firearm.






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9mm Pistol Magazine
A magazine is an ammunition
Ammunition

Ammunition, often referred to as ammo, is a generic term derived from the French language la munition which embraced all material used for war , but which in time came to refer specifically to gunpowder and artillery....
 storage and feeding device within or attached to a repeating firearm
Firearm

A firearm is a tool that projects either single or multiple projectiles at high velocity through a controlled explosion. The firing is achieved by the gases produced through rapid, confined combustion of a propellant....
. Magazines may be integral to the firearm (fixed) or removable (detachable). The magazine functions by moving the cartridges stored in the magazine into a position where they may be loaded into the chamber by the action
Firearm action

In firearms terminology, an action is the physical mechanism that manipulates cartridges and/or seals the breech. The term is also used to describe the method in which cartridges are loaded, locked, and extracted from the mechanism....
 of the firearm. The detachable magazine is often referred to as a clip
Clip (ammunition)

A clip is a device that is used to store multiple rounds of ammunition together as a unit, ready for insertion into the magazine of a repeating firearm....
; the correctness of this usage has been the subject of debate for most of a century.

Magazines come in many shapes and sizes, from bolt action express rifle
Express rifle

The term Express was first applied to hunting weapon beginning in the middle 1800s, to indicate a rifle or ammunition capable of higher than typical velocities....
s that hold only a few rounds to machine gun
Machine gun

A machine gun is a Automatic firearm mounted or portable firearm, usually designed to fire List of rifle cartridgess in quick succession from an Belt or large-capacity Magazine , typically at a rate of several hundred rounds per minute....
s that hold hundreds of rounds. Since the magazine is an essential part of most repeating firearms, they are often subject to regulation by gun control laws seeking to limit the number of cartridges they hold.

History of the magazine

The earliest firearms were loaded with loose powder and a lead ball, and to fire more than a single shot without reloading required multiple barrels, such as Pepper-box
Pepper-box

The Pepper-box revolver or simply pepperbox is defined as "a repeating firearm that has three or more barrels grouped around a central axis"....
 guns and Double-barreled shotgun
Double-barreled shotgun

A double-barreled shotgun is a shotgun with two parallel barrels, allowing two shots to be fired in quick succession....
s, or multiple chambers, such as in revolver
Revolver

A revolver is a repeating firearm that has a Cylinder containing multiple Chamber and at least one Gun barrel for firing. As the user cocks the hammer , the cylinder revolves to align the next chamber and round with the hammer and barrel, which gives this type of firearm its name....
s. Both of these add bulk and weight over a single barrel and a single chamber, however, and many attempts were made to get multiple shots from a single loading of a single barrel through the use of superposed load
Superposed load

A superposed load or stacked charge is a method used by various muzzleloading firearms, from matchlocks to caplocks, as well as newer Metal Storm weapons, to fire multiple shots from a single barrel without reloading....
s. Breech loading designs such as the needle gun
Needle gun

The Dreyse needle-gun was a military breechloading rifle, famous as the main infantry weapon of the Kingdom of Prussia, who adopted it for service in 1841 as the Dreyse Z?ndnadelgewehr, or Prussian Model 1841....
, and paper cartridge
Paper cartridge

Paper cartridge refers to one of various types of small arms ammunition used before the advent of the cartridge . These cartridges consisted of a paper cylinder or cone containing the bullet, gunpowder, and, in some cases, a primer or a lubricant and anti-fouling agent....
s sped the loading process, but successful repeating mechanisms did not appear until self contained cartridges were developed.

The earliest magazines appeared not on firearms, but rather on air gun
Air gun

An air gun is a rifle, pistol, or shotgun which fires projectiles by means of compressed pneumatic or other gas, in contrast to a firearms which burn a propellant....
s. Without the need for powder, the magazine contained only the balls, the power was provided by high pressure air supplied by an air reservoir in the butt of the gun. The Girandoni Air Rifle
Girandoni Air Rifle

The Girandoni Air Rifle was an airgun designed by Bartholom?us Girandoni circa 1779. The weapon was also known as the "Windb?chse", which means "wind rifle" in German....
, dating to around 1780, was fairly typical of the repeating air rifles of the time. The Girandoni held 22 balls in a gravity fed tubular magazine, located beside and parallel to the barrel. Due to the use of a large air reservoir, the rifle could fire all the shots in its magazine before the reservoir was depleted enough to require recharging. Firing was accomplished by raising the muzzle of the gun to allow the balls to fall to the rear of the magazine, sliding a ball from the magazine into the barrel with a sliding breech-block, then cocking the hammer (which was connected to a valve) and firing.

Early lever actions

The first successful repeater to appear was the Volcanic Rifle
Volcanic Repeating Arms

The Volcanic Repeating Arms Company was a company formed in 1852 by partners Horace Smith and Daniel B. Wesson to develop Walter Hunt's Rocket Ball ammunition and lever action mechanism....
, which used a hollow bullet with the base filled with powder and primer (an early form of caseless ammunition
Caseless ammunition

Caseless ammunition as a type of small arms ammunition eliminates the cartridge case that typically holds the primer, propellant, and projectile together as a unit....
) fed into the chamber from a spring-loaded tube called a magazine, named after a building or room used to store ammunition. While the anemic power of the Rocket Ball
Rocket Ball

The Rocket Ball was one of the earliest forms of metallic cartridge for firearms, containing bullet and black powder in a single, metal cased unit....
 ammunition used in the Volcanic doomed it to limited popularity, the basic design of the tubular magazine and lever action survive to this day.

The first magazine fed firearm to achieve widespread success was the Spencer repeating rifle
Spencer repeating rifle

The Spencer repeating rifle was a manually operated lever-action, repeating rifle fed from a tube magazine with cartridges. It was adopted by the Union Army, especially by the cavalry, during the American Civil War, but did not replace the standard issue muzzle-loading rifled muskets in use at the time....
, which saw service in the American Civil War
American Civil War

The American Civil War , also known as the War Between the States and several Naming the American Civil War, was a civil war in the United States....
. The Spencer used a tubular magazine located in the butt of the gun, rather than under the barrel, and used new rimfire
Rimfire ammunition

A rimfire is a type of firearm cartridge . It is called a rimfire because instead of the firing pin striking the primer cap at the center of the base of the cartridge to ignite it , the pin strikes the base's Rim ....
 metallic cartridges. The Spencer was successful, but the rimfire ammunition did occasionally ignite in the magazine tube, which would destroy the rifle and potentially injure the user. The lever action Henry
Henry rifle

The Henry repeating rifle is a lever-action, breech-loading, tubular magazine rifle....
 and Winchester rifle
Winchester rifle

The term Winchester rifle is frequently used to describe any of the lever-action rifles manufactured in the United States by the Winchester Repeating Arms Company, although the name is usually more specifically used in reference to the Winchester Model 1873 or the Winchester Model 1894 rifles....
s, evolved from the earlier Volcanic, saw service with a number of militaries, such as Turkey
Turkey

Turkey , known officially as the Republic of Turkey , is a Eurasian country that stretches across the Anatolian peninsula in southwest Asia and Thrace in the Balkans region of Southern Europe....
, while Switzerland
Switzerland

Switzerland is a landlocked Swiss Alps country of roughly 7.7 million people in Western Europe with an area of 41,285 km?. Switzerland is a federal republic consisting of 26 states called Cantons of Switzerland....
 and Italy
Italy

Italy , officially the Italian Republic , is a country located on the Italian Peninsula in Southern Europe and on the two largest islands in the Mediterranean Sea, Sicily and Sardinia....
 adopted similar designs.

Evolution of the bolt action magazine rifle

Lever action rifles, however, were not the future for military use. Beginning in the 1880s, the new bolt action rifle began to gain favor with militaries, and these were often equipped with tubular magazines. The Mauser Model 1871
Mauser Model 1871

The Mauser Model 1871 adopted as the Gewehr 71 or Infanterie-Gewehr 71 was the first of millions of rifles manufactured to the designs of Paul Mauser and Wilhelm Mauser of the Mauser company....
, originally a single shot action, added a tubular magazine in its 1884 update, and the Jarmann M1884
Jarmann M1884

The Norway Jarmann M1884 was among the first bolt action repeating rifles to be adopted in the Western world. Its adoption, and subsequent modifications, turned the Norwegian Army from a fighting force armed with single-shot black powder weapons into a force armed with modern repeating weapons firing Smokeless powder ammunition....
, adopted the same year, also used one. James Paris Lee
James Paris Lee

James Paris Lee was a Scottish-Canadian and later American inventor and Weapon designer, best known for inventing the bolt action that led to the Lee-Metford and Lee-Enfield series of rifles....
 patented a box magazine, which held rounds stacked vertically, in 1879 and 1882, which was first adopted by Austria in the form of an 11mm, straight-pull bolt action rifle of Mannlicher design in 1886; along with this rifle came the cartridge clip, which held 5 rounds ready to load into the magazine.

Along with the evolution of the magazine rifle, the military cartridge was evolving too, from large bore cartridges (.40 caliber/10 mm and larger) to much smaller bores, firing lighter, high velocity bullets, along with new propellants. The Lebel Model 1886 rifle
Lebel Model 1886 rifle

The Lebel Model 1886 rifle is a French 8mm bolt action rifle which has the distinction of being the first military rifle designed to use smokeless powder cartridges....
, the first rifle and cartridge to be designed for use with smokeless powder
Smokeless powder

Smokeless powder is the name given to a number of propellants used in firearms and artillery which produce negligible smoke when fired, unlike the older gunpowder which they replaced....
, used an 8 mm wadcutter
Wadcutter

A wadcutter is a special-purpose bullet specially designed for shooting paper targets, usually at close range and at subsonic velocities typically under 800 ft/s ....
-shaped bullet, loaded from a tubular magazine. This later became a problem as the Lebel's ammunition was updated to use a more aerodynamic pointed bullet, as modifications had to be made to the centerfire case to prevent the point of a bullet from igniting the round in front of it in the magazine.

The bolt action Krag-Jørgensen
Krag-Jørgensen

The Krag-J?rgensen is a Repeating rifle bolt action rifle designed by the Norway Ole Herman Johannes Krag and Erik J?rgensen in the late 19th century....
 rifle, invented in 1886, used a unique rotary magazine that was built into the receiver. Like Lee's box magazine, the rotary magazine held the rounds side-by-side, rather than back-to-front. Like most tubular magazines, it was loaded through a loading gate, this one located on the side of the receiver. The rotary magazine could be loaded with one round at a time, or with a clip of ammunition. While reliable, the Krag-Jørgensen's magazine was expensive to produce, and was adopted by only a few countries, including its home of Norway
Norway

Norway , officially the Kingdom of Norway, is a constitutional monarchy in Northern Europe that occupies the western portion of the Scandinavian Peninsula....
, Denmark
Denmark

Denmark is a Scandinavian country in northern Europe and the senior member of the Kingdom of Denmark. It is the southernmost of the Nordic countries....
, and the United States.

The Lee-Metford
Lee-Metford

The Lee-Metford rifle was a breech-loading British army service rifle, combining James Paris Lee's rear-locking bolt system and ten-round magazine with a seven groove rifled barrel designed by William Ellis Metford....
 rifle, developed in 1888, used an eight- or ten-round detachable box magazine. In 1890 the French adopted a new rifle, firing the same 8 mm Lebel
8 mm Lebel

The 8x50Rmm French rifle Cartridge was the first smokeless powder cartridge to be made and adopted by any country. It was introduced by France in 1886....
 cartridge, that fed from en-bloc clips; the clips were required for feeding from the internal magazine, and empty clips were pushed from the bottom of the action by the insertion of a loaded clip from the top. Mauser
Mauser

Mauser is a German arms manufacturer, maker of a line of bolt-action rifles and pistols from the 1870s to present. Their designs were built for the German armed forces but have been exported and licensed to a number of countries since the later Nineteenth and early Twentieth Centuries, as well as being a popular civilian firearm....
 was also developing box magazine-fed variants of its Model 1871 during this time, many of which used en-bloc clips, with models from 1889 through 1893 in various calibers were adopted by various militaries at this time.

In the arms race that preceded the start of World War I
World War I

World War I, or the First World War , was a global military conflict which involved the Great powers, organized into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War I and the Central Powers....
 there were many short lived designs, such as the M1895 Lee Navy
M1895 Lee Navy

The Lee Model 1895 was a straight-pull bolt-action rifle adopted by the U.S. Navy in 1895 as a service weapon. It fired a 6 mm cartridge, which used an early smokeless powder, was rimless, and was also used in the Navy version of the M1895 Colt-Browning machine gun machinegun....
 and Gewehr 1888, eventually replaced by the M1903 Springfield rifle and Gewehr 98
Gewehr 98

The Gewehr 98 was the standard German infantry rifle from 1898 to 1935, when it was replaced by the Karabiner 98k....
 respectively. The Russian
Russian Empire

File:Russian Emperor Flag.jpgFile:Romanov Flag.svgThe Russian Empire was a state that existed from 1721 until the Russian Revolution of 1917....
 Mosin-Nagant
Mosin-Nagant

The Mosin-Nagant is a bolt-action, internal magazine fed, military rifle that was used by the armed forces of the Russian Empire, the Soviet Union and various Eastern bloc nations....
, adopted in 1891, was a good example. It was not revolutionary; it was a bolt-action rifle, used a small bore smokeless powder cartridge, and a fixed box magazine loaded from the top with stripper clips (called chargers by the British), all of which were features that were used in earlier military rifles. What made the Nagant stand out was that it combined all the earlier features in a form that was to last virtually unchanged from its issue by Russia in 1894 through its use by the Soviet Union
Soviet Union

The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics was a Constitution of the Soviet Union socialist state that existed in Eurasia from 1922 to 1991.The name is a translation of the , romanization of Russian Soyuz Sovetskikh Sotsialisticheskikh Respublik, abbreviated ????, SSSR....
 in World War II
World War II

World War II, or the Second World War , was a global military conflict which involved a Participants in World War II, including all of the great powers, organised into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War II and the Axis powers....
. Of the major combatants, only France retained the outdated tubular magazine; all other combatants used rifles that were overall very similar to each other.

World War II and later

One of the last new clip-fed, fixed magazine rifles widely adopted (one that wasn't just a modification of an earlier rifle) was the M1 Garand rifle. The first semi-automatic rifle that was issued in large numbers to the infantry, the Garand was fed by a special eight round en-bloc clip. The clip itself was inserted into the rifle's magazine during loading, where it was locked in place. The rounds were fed directly from the clip, with a spring-loaded follower in the rifle pushing the rounds up into feeding position. When empty, the bolt would lock open, and a spring would automatically eject the empty clip, leaving the rifle ready to be reloaded. The M14 rifle, which was based on incremental changes to the Garand action, switched to a detachable box magazine.

The Soviet SKS
SKS

The SKS is a Soviet 7.62x39mm caliber Semi-automatic rifle, designed in 1945 by Sergei Gavrilovich Simonov. SKS is an acronym for Samozaryadniy Karabin sistemi Simonova , 1945 , or SKS 45....
 carbine, which entered service in 1945, was something of a stopgap between the semi-automatic service rifles being developed in the period leading up to World War II, and the new assault rifle
Assault rifle

An assault rifle is a rifle designed for combat, with selective fire . Assault rifles are the standard small arms in most modern Army, having largely superseded or supplemented battle rifles such as the World War II-era M1 Garand rifle and SVT-40....
 developed by the Germans. The SKS used a fixed magazine, holding ten rounds and fed by a conventional stripper clip. It was a modification of the earlier AVS-36 rifle, shortened and chambered for the new reduced power 7.62 x 39 mm cartridge. It was rendered obsolete for military use almost immediately by the 1947 introduction of the AK-47
AK-47

The AK-47 is a 7.62x39mm assault rifle developed in the Soviet Union by Mikhail Kalashnikov in two versions: the fixed stock AK-47 and the AKS-47 variant equipped with an underfolding metal shoulder stock....
 assault rifle, though it remained in service for many years in Soviet bloc nations alongside the AK-47. The detachable magazine quickly came to dominate post-war military rifle designs.

What to call it?

With the increased use of semi-automatic and automatic firearms, the detachable box magazine become increasingly common. Soon after the adoption of the M1911
M1911

The M1911 is a Trigger , semi-automatic pistol chambered for the .45 ACP Cartridge . It was designed by John Browning, and was the standard-issue side arm for the Military of the United States from 1911 to 1985, and is still carried by some U.S....
 pistol, the term "magazine" was settled on by the military and firearms experts, though the term "clip" is often used in its place (though only for detachable magazines, never fixed). The defining difference between clips and magazines is the presence of a feed mechanism in a magazine, typically a spring loaded follower, which a clip lacks. Use of the term "clip" to refer to detachable magazines is a point of strong disagreement.

Magazine types

Magazines come in many shapes and sizes, with the most common type in modern firearms being the detachable "box" type. Some magazine types are strongly associated with certain firearm times, such as the fixed "tubular" magazine found on most lever-action
Lever-action

Lever-action is a type of firearm action which uses a lever located around the trigger guard area to load fresh Cartridge into the Chamber of the Barrel when the lever is worked....
 rifles and pump action shotgun
Shotgun

A shotgun is a firearm that is usually designed to be fired from the shoulder, which uses the energy of a fixed shell to fire a number of small spherical pellets called lead shot, or a solid projectile called a shotgun slug....
s. A firearm using detachable magazines may accept a variety of types of magazine, such as the Thompson submachine gun
Thompson submachine gun

The Thompson submachine gun is an United States submachine gun that became infamous during the Prohibition in the United States era. It was a common sight of the time, being used by both law enforcement officers and criminals....
, which would accept box or drum magazines. Some types of firearm, such as the M-249 and other squad automatic weapon
Squad automatic weapon

A squad automatic weapon is a light machine gun or general purpose machine gun, used by a military. They are designed to give infantry squads or Section s a compact and mobile method source of suppressive fire....
s, can feed from both magazines and belts.

Box

The most popular type of magazine in modern rifles and handguns, a box magazine stores cartridges in a column, either one above the other or staggered zigzag fashion. This zigzag stack is often identified by the misnomer
Misnomer

A misnomer is a term which suggests an interpretation that is known to be untrue. Such incorrect terms sometimes derived their names because of the form, action, or origin of the subject?becoming named popularly or widely referenced?long before their true natures were known....
 double-column when in fact, it is a single, staggered column. As the firearm cycles, cartridges are moved to the top of the magazine via spring tension to either a single feed position or side-by-side feed positions. Box magazines may be integral to the firearm or removable.

  • An internal box or fixed magazine (also known as a blind box magazine when lacking a floorplate) is built into the firearm and is not easily removable. This type of magazine is found most often on bolt-action
    Bolt-action

    The term bolt action refers to a type of firearm action in which the weapon's Bolt is operated manually by the opening and closing of the Breech-loading weapon with a small handle, most commonly placed on the right-hand side of the weapon....
     rifles. An internal box magazine is usually charged through the action, one round at a time. Military rifles often use stripper clip
    Stripper clip

    A stripper clip or charger is a speedloader that holds several cartridge s together in a single unit for easier loading of a firearm's magazine ....
    s or chargers
    Stripper clip

    A stripper clip or charger is a speedloader that holds several cartridge s together in a single unit for easier loading of a firearm's magazine ....
     permitting multiple rounds, commonly 5 or 10 at a time, to be loaded at once. Some internal box magazines use en-bloc clip
    Clip (ammunition)

    A clip is a device that is used to store multiple rounds of ammunition together as a unit, ready for insertion into the magazine of a repeating firearm....
    s that are loaded into the magazine with the ammunition and that are ejected from the firearm when empty.


Caroline Chargeur Plein P1000499b
*A detachable box magazine is a self-contained mechanism capable of being loaded or unloaded while detached from the host firearm. They are attached via a slot in the firearm receiver usually below the action but occasionally to the side (FG42, Johnson LMG) or on top (Bren gun, FN P90
FN P90

The P90 is a Belgium designed submachine gun. The weapon?s name is an abbreviation of Project 90, which specifies a weapon system of the 1990s....
). When the magazine is empty, it can be detached from the firearm and replaced by another full magazine. This significantly speeds the process of reloading, allowing the operator quick access to ammunition. This type of magazine may be straight or curved, the curve being necessary if the rifle uses rimmed ammunition or ammunition with a tapered case. Box magazines are often affixed to each other with clips, tape, straps, or otherwise, for quicker access.

There are, however, exceptions to these rules. The Lee-Enfield
Lee-Enfield

The Lee-Enfield bolt-action, magazine-fed, repeating rifle was the main firearm used by the military forces of the British Empire/Commonwealth of Nations during the first half of the 20th century....
 rifle had a detachable box magazine only to facilitate cleaning. The Lee-Enfield magazine did open, permitting rapid unloading of the magazine without having to operate the bolt-action repeatedly to unload the magazine. Others, like the Breda Modello 30
Breda 30

The Fucile Mitragliatore Breda modello 30 was the standard light machine gun of the Italy army during World War II.The Breda 30 is widely regarded as a poor weapon....
, had a fixed protruding magazine that resembled a conventional detachable box but was non-detachable.

Tubular

Many of the first repeating rifle
Repeating rifle

A repeating rifle is a single barreled rifle containing multiple rounds of ammunition. These rounds are loaded from a magazine by means of a manual or automatic mechanism, and the action that reloads the rifle also typically recocks the firing action....
s, particularly lever-action
Lever-action

Lever-action is a type of firearm action which uses a lever located around the trigger guard area to load fresh Cartridge into the Chamber of the Barrel when the lever is worked....
 and slide-action types, used a single or multiple tubular magazines that store cartridges end-to-end inside of a spring-loaded tube typically running parallel to the barrel, or in the buttstock. This type of magazine is usually fixed to the firearm, meaning that it is not removed in use. Tubular magazines can still be found today, commonly in shotguns, rimfire rifles, or firearms designed to use round-nose, flat-nose, or otherwise soft-pointed bullets. The tubular magazine was made obsolete for most military purposes with the introduction of pointed "Spitzer" bullet
Bullet

A bullet is a hard projectile propelled by a firearm, Sling , or air gun and is normally made from metal. A bullet does not contain explosives, but damages the intended target by tissue or mechanical disruption through impact or penetration....
s due to that risk of ignition when the bullets tip impacts the primer of the cartridge ahead of it during recoil.

Rotary

The rotary or spool magazine consists of a star-shaped rotor, or sprocket
Sprocket

A sprocket is a profiled wheel with teeth that meshes with a roller chain, Caterpillar track or other perforated or indented material. It is distinguished from a gear in that sprockets are never meshed together directly, and from a pulley by not usually having a flange at each side....
, actuated by a torsion spring. The magazine may be fixed or detachable. Cartridges fit between the teeth of the sprocket, which is mounted on a spindle parallel to the bore axis, with a torsion spring providing the pressure necessary to rotate the rounds into the feeding position. Rotary magazines are usually of low capacity of ten rounds or less, depending on the cartridge used. The rotary magazine was first used in the Mannlicher-Schönauer
Mannlicher-Schönauer

The Mannlicher-Sch?nauer is a type of Magazine #Rotary Magazine bolt action rifle produced by Steyr-Mannlicher for the Hellenic Army in 1903 and later was also used in small numbers by the Military of Austria....
 rifles and is still used in a few modern firearm designs, most notably the Ruger 10/22
Ruger 10/22

The Ruger 10/22 is a Semi-automatic rifle rimfire rifle chambered in .22 Long Rifle. It has a removable 10-round rotary Magazine_ which allows the magazine to fit flush with the bottom of the stock....
 and the Steyr SSG 69
Steyr SSG 69

The SSG 69 is a bolt-action sniper rifle produced by Steyr Mannlicher and serves as the standard sniper rifle for the Military of Austria.Adopted in 1969 , it was ahead of its time with the use of synthetics and cold-hammer forged barrels for accuracy.SSG-69 is the Austrian Army's standard issue sniper rifle, the PI is the civilian version...
.

Drum

Today, drum magazines are used primarily for light machine gun
Light machine gun

A light machine gun or LMG is a machine gun that is generally lighter than other machine guns of the same period, and is usually designed to be carried by an individual soldier, with or without an assistant....
s. In one type, a moving partition within a cylindrical chamber forces loose rounds into an exit slot, with the cartridges being stored parallel to the axis of rotation. After loading of the magazine, a wound spring or other mechanical force the partition against the rounds. In other designs, notably the Beta C-Mag
Beta C-Mag

The Beta C-Mag is a 100-round capacity Magazine designed by L. James Sullivan and adapted for use in numerous firearms firing the 5.56 x 45 mm NATO, 7.62 x 51 mm NATO, and 9 x 19 mm Parabellum cartridges....
, a single staggered column is pushed by a follower through a curved path either from a single or dual drums.

Cylindrical designs such as rotary and drum magazines allow for larger capacity than box magazines, without growing to excessive length. Drum magazines sacrifice reliability, though, being more complicated. Many drum-fed firearms can also load from conventional boxes, such as the Russia
Russia

Russia , or the Russian Federation , is a list of countries spanning more than one continent country extending over much of northern Eurasia....
n RPK
RPK

The RPK is a 7.62x39mm light machine gun of Soviet Union design, developed by Mikhail Kalashnikov in the late 1950s, parallel to the AKM assault rifle....
 light machine gun and the American
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
 Thompson submachine gun
Thompson submachine gun

The Thompson submachine gun is an United States submachine gun that became infamous during the Prohibition in the United States era. It was a common sight of the time, being used by both law enforcement officers and criminals....
.

Pan

Often referred to as a drum magazine, the pan magazine differs from other drum magazines in that the cartridges are stored perpendicular to the axis of rotation, rather than parallel, and are usually mounted on top of the firearm. This type is used on the Lewis Gun
Lewis Gun

The Lewis Gun is a pre-World War I era light machine gun of American design that was perfected and most widely used by the forces of the British Empire....
, American-180 submachine gun and the Degtyarev light machine gun
Degtyarev light machine gun

The ?????? ??????? ????????a ???????? or DP was a light machine gun used by the Soviet Union starting in 1928. It fired the 7.62x54mmR cartridge and was cheap and easy to manufacture - early models had fewer than 80 parts and could be built by unskilled labour....
.

Helical

Helical magazines extend the drum magazine design so that rounds follow a spiral path, allowing for a very large ammunition capacity in a compact package. However, this requires a complex mechanism and thus increases the likelihood of a malfunction. Examples are the Calico 960
Calico 960

The Calico M960 9 mm is a semi-automatic carbine , manufactured by Calico Light Weapons Systems. Its unique feature is its high-capacity, cylindrical, Helical magazine and retractable stock....
, the Chinese Chang Feng
CF-05

The CF05 submachine gun developed by Chinese Chang Feng in early 1990's in response to China demand for a new submachine gun design. Design team for the CF05 were same team who designed the QSZ-92 pistol, which is now the main pistol used by PLA and PAP....
, and PP-19 Bizon submachine guns.

High capacity magazines

The term high capacity magazine is a term used to describe magazines that exceed a certain "normal" capacity, whose definition is dependent upon context. In many jurisdictions, magazine capacity of certain firearms is legally restricted, such as under the United States' Federal Assault Weapons Ban
Federal assault weapons ban

The Federal Assault Weapons Ban was a subtitle of the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act, a federal law of the United States that included a prohibition on the sale to civilians of certain semi-automatic firearm so called "assault weapons" including military-style semiautomatic rifles derived from assault rifles....
, which defined a magazine capable of holding more than ten rounds of ammunition as a high capacity ammunition feeding device. Currently, in the United States, six states limit magazine capacities.

Many pistol and rifle magazines classified by such laws as "high capacity" are in fact the factory standard magazines originally designed for use with their respective firearms. Reduced capacity magazines, generally holding ten rounds, were created subsequently in response to enactment of the bans.

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